Human muscle weakness and fatigue: the effects of disuse, age and exercise

Weakness and fatigue in the human triceps surae have been assessed objectively by the measurement of absolute force evoked using supramaximal stimulation. The effects of disuse, age and exercise were systematically investigated. Under control conditions the triceps surae of young men were found to g...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: White, Michael J.
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 1987
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11725/
_version_ 1848791344983572480
author White, Michael J.
author_facet White, Michael J.
author_sort White, Michael J.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Weakness and fatigue in the human triceps surae have been assessed objectively by the measurement of absolute force evoked using supramaximal stimulation. The effects of disuse, age and exercise were systematically investigated. Under control conditions the triceps surae of young men were found to generate high maximal tetanic forces, have a mean twitch time to peak tension of 107 msec and did not fatigue readily. This was indicative of a large muscle mass with a predominance of type I (slow twitch) fibres. Muscle temperature manipulation over the range 29.5 to 39.1°C did not affect maximal force generation but had a profound effect on the force and time course of twitch and unfused tetanic responses. The triceps surae of 70 year old men were found to be slower contracting weaker and yet, paradoxically more fatiguable than, those of young men. These changes may be explained by a slowing of the Ca 2+ kinetics in the remaining muscle fibres of the elderly and restricted blood supply during intermittent exercise. Long term immobilisation due to injury caused a substantial reduction in the force generating capacity of the triceps surae and a change in twitch time course which could be explained by selective type I fibre atropy. In contrast voluntary immobilisation for 2 weeks caused a reduction of maximal voluntary force and a prolongation of the twitch response which could not be accounted for by loss of contractile machinery. Voluntary dynamic exercise involving concentric contraction of the triceps surae produced small short lasting force decrements. Eccentric contractions caused large long lasting decreases in force particularly at low stimulus frequencies, which were explained by uncoupling of excitation and contraction. Responses to submaximal stimulation were found to be voltage dependent and did not accurately reflect the response of the whole muscle. The need for supramaximal stimulation in the assessment of weakness and fatigue in the human triceps surae was highlighted.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T18:27:02Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-11725
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T18:27:02Z
publishDate 1987
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-117252025-02-28T11:15:15Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11725/ Human muscle weakness and fatigue: the effects of disuse, age and exercise White, Michael J. Weakness and fatigue in the human triceps surae have been assessed objectively by the measurement of absolute force evoked using supramaximal stimulation. The effects of disuse, age and exercise were systematically investigated. Under control conditions the triceps surae of young men were found to generate high maximal tetanic forces, have a mean twitch time to peak tension of 107 msec and did not fatigue readily. This was indicative of a large muscle mass with a predominance of type I (slow twitch) fibres. Muscle temperature manipulation over the range 29.5 to 39.1°C did not affect maximal force generation but had a profound effect on the force and time course of twitch and unfused tetanic responses. The triceps surae of 70 year old men were found to be slower contracting weaker and yet, paradoxically more fatiguable than, those of young men. These changes may be explained by a slowing of the Ca 2+ kinetics in the remaining muscle fibres of the elderly and restricted blood supply during intermittent exercise. Long term immobilisation due to injury caused a substantial reduction in the force generating capacity of the triceps surae and a change in twitch time course which could be explained by selective type I fibre atropy. In contrast voluntary immobilisation for 2 weeks caused a reduction of maximal voluntary force and a prolongation of the twitch response which could not be accounted for by loss of contractile machinery. Voluntary dynamic exercise involving concentric contraction of the triceps surae produced small short lasting force decrements. Eccentric contractions caused large long lasting decreases in force particularly at low stimulus frequencies, which were explained by uncoupling of excitation and contraction. Responses to submaximal stimulation were found to be voltage dependent and did not accurately reflect the response of the whole muscle. The need for supramaximal stimulation in the assessment of weakness and fatigue in the human triceps surae was highlighted. 1987 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11725/1/379281.pdf White, Michael J. (1987) Human muscle weakness and fatigue: the effects of disuse, age and exercise. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Triceps muscle Supramaximal stimulation Effects of immobilization on muscles Effects of age on muscles Muscle physiology
spellingShingle Triceps muscle
Supramaximal stimulation
Effects of immobilization on muscles
Effects of age on muscles
Muscle physiology
White, Michael J.
Human muscle weakness and fatigue: the effects of disuse, age and exercise
title Human muscle weakness and fatigue: the effects of disuse, age and exercise
title_full Human muscle weakness and fatigue: the effects of disuse, age and exercise
title_fullStr Human muscle weakness and fatigue: the effects of disuse, age and exercise
title_full_unstemmed Human muscle weakness and fatigue: the effects of disuse, age and exercise
title_short Human muscle weakness and fatigue: the effects of disuse, age and exercise
title_sort human muscle weakness and fatigue: the effects of disuse, age and exercise
topic Triceps muscle
Supramaximal stimulation
Effects of immobilization on muscles
Effects of age on muscles
Muscle physiology
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11725/